The best theatre to stream this month: The Little Big Things, David Tennant in Good and more
Royal Ballet | The Guardian
by Chris Wiegand
1w ago
Musicals, Shakespeare and multiple versions of Nick Payne’s multiverse drama Constellations are among May’s digital theatre highlights One of the most celebrated new British musicals in recent years, this true story about Henry Fraser, a young rugby player paralysed in an accident, extended its run at London’s @sohoplace by three months. Fresh from Amy Trigg’s Olivier win as best actress in a supporting role in a musical, it joins the NT at Home collection from 9 May ..read more
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Royal Ballet and Opera announces ambitious 2024-25 season – and name change
Royal Ballet | The Guardian
by Imogen Tilden
1w ago
2024-25 programme includes premieres of Mark-Anthony Turnage’s opera Festen and Wayne McGregor’s Margaret Atwood ballet MaddAddam Eight new productions, a world premiere, a European premiere – and a name change: the Royal Ballet and Opera, as it is now to be known, announced on Tuesday an ambitious programme across the main and the Linbury stages for the 2024-25 season. The world premiere will be Mark-Anthony Turnage’s opera Festen based on Thomas Vinterberg’s cult 1998 film, which also became a successful stage play. Lee Hall has written the libretto, Richard Jones will direct, Edward Gardner ..read more
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Hofesh Shechter: From England With Love; International Draft Work – review
Royal Ballet | The Guardian
by Sarah Crompton
2w ago
Queen Elizabeth Hall; Linbury theatre, Royal Opera House, LondonShechter’s young dancers thrill in his hellish vision of England. Elsewhere, emerging choreographers from Brno to Birmingham showcase short works Under a smoky spotlight a group of young people assembles in approximations of school uniform, crests on their blazers, rucksacks on their backs. They look like any raggle-taggle bunch of youngsters anywhere, scruffy and relaxed. Then, as Elgar’s Nimrod soars on the soundtrack, they raise their arms in delicate attitudes, sweeping circles where the hands are at first gracefully curved, b ..read more
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Swan Lake; Danses Concertantes/Different Drummer/Requiem – review
Royal Ballet | The Guardian
by Sarah Crompton
1M ago
Royal Opera House, LondonThe Royal Ballet’s long-running and rather cumbersome Swan Lake is elevated by the dancers’ artistry, while a fine Kenneth MacMillan triple bill deserves more performances The status of Swan Lake has changed. Once it was first among equals in the traditional three-acter stakes, combining Tchaikovsky’s score with a heartbreaking story of sacrifice and love and some magnificent choreography by the 19th-century master Marius Petipa and his protege Lev Ivanov. Now it’s seen as the brand ballet, an automatic seat-filler, and hence coffers-filler. This explains its presence ..read more
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Manon review – Kenneth MacMillan’s 50-year-old masterpiece still bewitches
Royal Ballet | The Guardian
by Sarah Crompton
2M ago
Royal Opera House, London The Royal Ballet revisits the choreographer’s timeless rags-to-riches work, putting assorted casts through its finely tuned emotional wringer In 2011, at the age of 46, when she had barely danced a classical work for four years, Sylvie Guillem returned to the role of Manon in Kenneth MacMillan’s three-act ballet. She said she wanted to make sure there was nothing new she could find in this, his 1974 dance interpretation of Abbé Prévost’s story of a convent girl who becomes a courtesan and dies when her love for a penniless student overwhelms her determination to make ..read more
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Festival of New Choreography review – the Royal Ballet spreads its wings
Royal Ballet | The Guardian
by David Jays
2M ago
Royal Opera House, London Impressive new work from Joshua Junker and Mthuthuzeli November pushes dancers well beyond the classical repertoire Ballet is a heritage art form that craves renewal. Companies often seek a galvanising jolt from artists in other dance styles, but the Royal Ballet’s festival gives classically trained makers a space to spread their wings, with length, large ensembles and strong design. The evening of new works results in confident main stage debuts for two experienced women based in New York and two younger men working in the UK. The only choreographer drawn from the R ..read more
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Manon review – the Royal Ballet brings beauty to sordid snake pits of Paris
Royal Ballet | The Guardian
by Lyndsey Winship
4M ago
Royal Opera House, LondonKenneth MacMillan’s journey into a world of darkness is performed with consummate craft by a superb company In the 1970s Kenneth MacMillan snatched ballet from the land of myths and fairytales and thrust it into worlds of psychological darkness, with complex, unsympathetic characters that dancers love to get their teeth into. Does Manon, a ballet about prostitution and sexual violence, come dangerously close to misery porn? In the lower rungs of 18th-century Paris, women are bought and abused, the society on show is an ugly one, but this is ballet so it’s also beautifu ..read more
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From Bong Joon-ho to Van Gogh: Observer critics’ culture highlights for 2024
Royal Ballet | The Guardian
by Guardian Staff
4M ago
From Withnail and I on stage to Olivia Rodrigo on tour, Sally Wainwright’s new drama to Blondie, Bruckner and Jez Butterworth, our experts guide you through the treats in store this year Make time for three masterly moviesThere comes a point when the buzz about a movie release starts to be deafening. Then the pre-emptive backlash kicks in. Can it really be the masterpiece that people are claiming it is, or have the critics and festival punters fallen prey to collective hysteria? It’s a fair question, but for three forthcoming releases the hype is very much justified ..read more
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Dance: Sarah Crompton’s five best shows of 2023
Royal Ballet | The Guardian
by Sarah Crompton
4M ago
Tiler Peck breezed in, Carmen Herrera bowed out, Benji Reid made a striking return and Pam Tanowitz entranced Read the Observer critics’ review of 2023 in full 1. Song of Songs Barbican, London; October American choreographer Pam Tanowitz has had a gleaming 2023, with a triple bill for the Royal Ballet (Secret Things, Dispatch Duet and Everyone Keeps Me) that revealed her deep understanding of dance history. But it was Song of Songs, for her own company, that sealed her reputation as one of the most significant dance-makers of our own time. Cool, rigorous, and intricately structured, unfoldi ..read more
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Readers’ favourite stage shows of 2023
Royal Ballet | The Guardian
by Guardian readers
4M ago
This year, our readers were blown away by productions from Machinal to Free Your Mind – with one theatregoer returning to watch Groundhog Day four times Fortune theatre, LondonA gloriously silly take on second world war subterfuge. Think MI6 the musical, complete with General Melchett, cross dressing, and lots of eye rolling at Ian Fleming. The score is infectious, the jokes so fast you will only catch half of them on the first viewing, and a half dozen performers create the presence and energy of 50 on Broadway. See it while you can – you will laugh and cry, and you won’t regret it. Lewis, 32 ..read more
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